Mr. Mukasey Goes to Washington
We've done relatively little about the nomination of former judge Michael Mukasey to serve as attorney general. While the WSJ Law Blog was dredging up his third-grade book reports -- okay, not quite, but some college newspaper articles that he may or may not have written -- we didn't have much. But now we'd like to atone for that, with a piece we just did for the New York Observer.
We speculate that Michael Mukasey might be in D.C. longer than he might expect, especially if his good friend Rudy Giuliani wins the presidency (and possibly even if fellow New Yorker Hillary Clinton does). We discuss how he might have come to be picked as AG, despite not being a D.C. denizen like Ted Olson, Laurence Silberman, or George Terwilliger:
Mr. Mukasey was simply more of a known quantity to the White House than the typical Beltway outsider. The White House staff includes three former assistant U.S. attorneys from Manhattan, as well as other ex-New York lawyers who regularly practiced before Mukasey as a judge. Among the New Yorkers at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Mr. Mukasey enjoyed great respect, and was viewed as ideologically acceptable too, especially on war on terror issues.
The rest of the piece, including a discussion of what might be called the Curse of the Southern District (from President Bush's point of view), is available here.
Mr. Mukasey Goes to Washington [New York Observer]
An Old Friend Joins Giuliani in a Spotlight [New York Times]

Wait, Giuliani is running for NYC Mayor again? I thought he was a candidate for US President. I'm surprised that hasn't gotten more play in the press.
How about doing a story on Jesse Jackson's comment about Obama?
Did you guys see the Paul Hastings building in "The Biggest Loser" TV show last night?
wow, that's a stupid point, Lat. You don't go from being US AG to FBI director, idiot. The FBI director reports to the AG, why would you want a step down?
10:57: Because "President Clinton would probably want to pick her own attorney general (perhaps her husband’s former Deputy A.G., Jamie Gorelick)."
But would he take a lower post than AG? He might just go back to Patterson at that point.
Burrrrr.... [Shivering at the though of Gorelick as AG].
Wasn't Gorelick effectively the AG under Clinton?
Dear Reading Comprehension:
Fuck you. The point is that nobody would go from AG to FBI Director, not why he might not be asked to stay on as AG.
I suspect you didn't do well on the reading comprehension section of the LSATs.
A "known quality"?